OATP Twitter feed: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
* It's the most popular of the [[OATP_feeds | many formats]] of the primary OATP feed. | * It's the most popular of the [[OATP_feeds | many formats]] of the primary OATP feed. | ||
Note that | Note that the Twitter feed is ''abridged''. | ||
* It's abridged because the native OATP output is in RSS, and all the RSS-to-Twitter tools we've been able to identify truncate the feed. | * It's abridged because the native OATP output is in RSS, and all the RSS-to-Twitter tools we've been able to identify truncate the feed. | ||
* Currently, we use [https://ifttt.com/ IFTTT], which limits the feed to 25 tweets per day. That's a higher cap than any other tool we've found, but we'd still like to remove the cap. | * Currently, we use [https://ifttt.com/ IFTTT], which limits the feed to 25 tweets per day. That's a higher cap than any other tool we've found, but we'd still like to remove the cap. |
Revision as of 12:56, 21 April 2020
You can follow the primary OATP Twitter feed at @oatp.
- It's the most popular of the many formats of the primary OATP feed.
Note that the Twitter feed is abridged.
- It's abridged because the native OATP output is in RSS, and all the RSS-to-Twitter tools we've been able to identify truncate the feed.
- Currently, we use IFTTT, which limits the feed to 25 tweets per day. That's a higher cap than any other tool we've found, but we'd still like to remove the cap.
- On most days, we tag fewer than 25 items, and the Twitter feed is complete. But on heavy days we exceed 25, and the Twitter feed is incomplete.
- This is annoying. But it helps to remember that it's a side effect of success (success in covering OA comprehensively).
We welcome your help in identifying or creating an RSS-to-Twitter tool that does not abridge the Twitter feed.
- If you have any ideas on these lines, please contact Peter Suber.